7 Steps to Maximizing a Small Kitchen

Posted by
Merillat Marketing
on March 02, 2017

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If you were asked to describe the kitchen of your dreams, you probably
wouldn’t use the word “small.” However, small kitchens have many advantages,
and have just as much, if not more, opportunity for an upgrade. It’s all about
use of space, and maximizing the space you have. You can make your kitchen look
bigger with these small kitchen ideas and a few design tricks.

Replace
some (or all) of your cabinet doors with glass ones.Glass doors allow
your eyes to travel through to the back of the cabinets, which helps a small
kitchen seem bigger. Adding interior cabinet
lighting helps
even more—just don’t clutter up the inside of the cabinets or you’ll defeat the purpose. Have an exterior door in your kitchen? Make sure that’s
glass as well –
sliding patio
doors
can maximize the open feeling and for rooms with limited floor space.

2. SMALL & SIMPLE

The last thing a small kitchen needs is larger-than-life
furnishings. Avoid overstuffed furniture, chunky legs or thick bases, which
make a small kitchen look even smaller. Instead, choose things that don’t take
up valuable floor space, like small islands, slim chairs, streamlined stools
and narrow tables.

3. MONOCHROMATIC COLORS

Another small kitchen idea: paint walls the same color as the
cabinets. Sticking to a single color erases visual boundaries. Conventional
design encourages sticking to light colors, such as Cotton, Chiffon or Mist, that
reflect light to make the kitchen feel bigger. But don’t be afraid of darker
colors, like Dusk, Pecan and Kona, which visually recede,
making the walls look farther back than they really are.

4. CLEAN LINES

Don’t over complicate a small kitchen. Big corbels, ornate
cabinetry and fussy details can interrupt the flow in a small kitchen and make
it feel chopped up. Try to keep the details simple and sleek to make the
kitchen feel roomier.

Open shelves in a compact kitchen create the illusion of a more
expansive space. Combine the small kitchen ideas #4 Clean Lines with #5 Open
Shelving by choosing floating shelves over other options that include brackets
or ornate details.

6. ORGANIZED SPACES

Don’t overcrowd countertops, shelves and cabinets with clutter. Not only does it make the kitchen feel closed in, it makes it difficult to find kitchenware, prep meals and get things done efficiently. Use storage solutions, such as a Wall Appliance Garage and Base Mixer Shelf, to create convenient hiding spots for small appliances when you’re not using them.

Whether
you choose light or dark colors for your small-sized kitchen, lots of
light—natural and man made—will help it feel as large as possible. Add LED lighting under,
above and inside your kitchen cabinetry. Keep window treatments very simple, or eliminate them entirely. Windows above the cabinets
can let in an abundance of natural night, or, try them as a backsplash behind
the sink for a minimal loss of storage space.
Milgard®
Tuscany® Series vinyl windows are durable, beautiful and
come with a Full Lifetime Warranty.